Kazumara

joined 1 year ago
[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 3 months ago

In corpo speak. I’ve seen it used as a synonym for “energy.”

Wow that's bad. You have my pity

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 3 months ago

What about an MRI? Too slow maybe?

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 29 points 3 months ago (6 children)

Those two skull outlines just look like they were photographed with a different focal length or something. There is no way skull morphology is this strongly affected by sex.

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 3 months ago

Yeah I'd second that. It's good for discovering valid settings as you get start, and then once you want to do more complicated stuff, the XML option view becomes useful, and then if you want to try on CLI after all you can start using virsh to administer the same VMs.

At least that's how I progressed through the stages as I started messing with a Windows VM for a game that doesn't lend itself to hosting on Linux natively.

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 6 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Sure but by naturalising she would become a US American woman originally from Mexico. Unless you're allowed to retain original citizenship in which case she'd be a dual citizen of both. But just calling her a Mexican woman living in the USA does not make sense.

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 9 points 3 months ago (8 children)

I don't get it, the article calls her a Mexican woman, but also says that she voted for Trump. Wouldn't voting in a US federal election mean she's has to be a US American woman?

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 17 points 3 months ago

Wow Nvidia, it's really that bad? You didn't have to shout it from the rooftops with your actions like that!

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 3 months ago

They are so often stateful and fall over when some scanner comes by, or if a light DNS DoS attack happens, compromising the entire access link, when the scanned systems or the DNS server weren't even bothered by the amount of requests.

They introduce weird unexpected restrictions, like preferring to blackhole our customers traffic rather than accepting some asymmetric routing. And then we get blamed for their setup, which they don't even know.

They ossify protocol development in general, requiring things like header encryption in QUIC to force them to ignore things that aren't their business anyway.

They are apparently also expensive as hell, multiple customers have declined upgrades because they don't have fast enough firewalls and not enough budget to buy faster ones.

Those are the ones that come to mind right now. There are also occasional bugs that make our or our customers lives difficult, but I can't recall a clear one at the moment.

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 3 months ago (3 children)

War ja eh nur in Bedrock, also irrelevant.

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

giving out my IP to trusted friends

Just in case you ever get back into it: We regularly see scanners scanning the internet with a million packets per second at work these days. That means it takes them 4000 seconds to scan the entire IPv4 Internet to check who responds on port 3784. So handing out the IP selectively won't be enough.

I also learned that the hard way privately with my Minecraft server. It was found in a scan and listed on Shodan at some point, and I hadn't put up a whitelist. Some shitty kids came and destroyed whatever they could find before finally putting up signs to mock me lol

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Firewalls in general.

[–] Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 3 months ago

And as a follow up, Teams was never good because it was never native to anything (instead it was Electron and is now some sort of React/Edge homebrew).

view more: ‹ prev next ›